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Kimi K3: Open Frontier Intelligence

https://www.kimi.com/blog/kimi-k3
1053•vincent_s•9h ago•656 comments

LM Studio Bionic: the AI agent for open models

https://lmstudio.ai/blog/introducing-lm-studio-bionic
124•minimaxir•3h ago•47 comments

Microsoft Comic Chat is now open source

https://opensource.microsoft.com/blog/2026/07/16/microsoft-comic-chat-is-now-open-source/
486•jervant•7h ago•109 comments

The Little Book of Reinforcement Learning

https://github.com/alxndrTL/little-book-rl/
28•mustaphah•1h ago•3 comments

Decoy Font

https://www.mixfont.com/experiments/decoy-font
358•ray__•7h ago•89 comments

Mathematics of Data Science

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.11938
76•Anon84•3h ago•2 comments

My car's OTA update broke Android Auto, and it's a indictment of modern software

https://imdanielkendall.com/the-great-software-regress-how-move-fast-and-break-things-broke-our-l...
83•Expletive4138•1h ago•86 comments

NotebookLM is now Gemini Notebook

https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/products/gemini-notebook/notebooklm-gemini-notebook/
218•xnx•7h ago•119 comments

Ring-Zero: Scaling Zero RL to a Trillion Parameters for Emergent Reasoning

https://arxiv.org/abs/2607.12395
23•binyu•2h ago•6 comments

'Likweli': A new monkey species discovered in the Congo Basin

https://news.yale.edu/2026/07/15/meet-likweli-new-monkey-species-discovered-congo-basin
26•gmays•2h ago•3 comments

Show HN: Mojibake – a low-level Unicode library written in C

https://mojibake.zaerl.com/
20•program•1h ago•0 comments

Helium escaping from atmosphere of nearby rocky exoplanet in a habitable zone

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.aea9708
51•anyonecancode•3h ago•12 comments

Detecting LLM-Generated Texts with “Classical” Machine Learning

https://blog.lyc8503.net/en/post/llm-classifier/
139•uneven9434•7h ago•101 comments

OnePlus halts operations in USA and Europe

https://community.oneplus.com/thread/2170715118587871237
526•pilililo2•13h ago•307 comments

Immersive Linear Algebra Book with Interactive Figures (2015)

https://immersivemath.com/ila/
154•srean•8h ago•24 comments

Abstracting Effects with Continuations

https://crowdhailer.me/2026-07-15/abstracting-effects-with-continuations/
31•crowdhailer•13h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Clx – Compile Lua to Native Executables Through C++20

https://github.com/samyeyo/clx
74•_samt_•5d ago•2 comments

The privacy problems hidden in your period tracker

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260715-how-period-trackers-share-womens-private-details
59•tchalla•3h ago•34 comments

CVE-2026-25089: FortiSandbox unauthenticated command injection added to CISA KEV

https://hellorecon.com/blog/cve-2026-25089
12•slvnx•1h ago•0 comments

Adaptional (YC S25) Is Hiring

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/adaptional/jobs
1•acesohc•6h ago

Solod: Go can be a better C

https://solod.dev
5•koeng•3d ago•0 comments

Goes-19 weather satellite enters Safe Hold mode

https://www.spaceweather.gov/news/goes-19-safe-hold
144•yabones•10h ago•73 comments

Show HN: ReasonGate- An explainable gate that blocks LLM prompt injection

https://github.com/cgrtml/reasongate
6•Cagritemel•1h ago•6 comments

How Our Rust-to-Zig Rewrite Is Going

https://rtfeldman.com/rust-to-zig
386•jorangreef•12h ago•212 comments

Timeline Scan – AI fixes the dates on your scanned photos

https://timelinescan.com/
18•HoserHoser•3h ago•19 comments

How to Train a Gen AI Kick Drum Model on Your Old Linux Desktop with 6GB VRAM

https://www.zhinit.dev/blog/training-a-kick-drum-diffusion-model
86•zhinit•8h ago•53 comments

Show HN: Libretto PR agents – Automatically fix failing playwright scripts

https://libretto.sh/debug-agents
16•muchael•3h ago•1 comments

The LLM Critics Are Right. I Use LLMs Anyway

https://www.theocharis.dev/blog/llm-critics-are-right-i-use-llms-anyway/
180•JeremyTheo•12h ago•182 comments

Scaling to 1M concurrent sandboxes in seconds

https://modal.com/blog/scaling-to-1-million-concurrent-sandboxes-in-seconds
11•thundergolfer•2h ago•1 comments

Launch HN: Traceforce (YC S26) – Company-wide security monitoring for AI apps

21•XiaHua•7h ago•11 comments
Open in hackernews

'Likweli': A new monkey species discovered in the Congo Basin

https://news.yale.edu/2026/07/15/meet-likweli-new-monkey-species-discovered-congo-basin
26•gmays•2h ago

Comments

fsckboy•1h ago
I assume there are local people living in the jungle there? did the researchers ask them what they think? perhaps Likweli looks, well, like other monkeys around there, and in the pre-Darwin West people were probably not super clear about about small differences between species. I'm just curious, usually for monkeys there are some humans around who've been eating them.

this paragraph mentions it but doesn't clear much up:

>Residents in only eight villages reported knowledge of the species and could accurately describe it. Since people in the region typically have detailed knowledge of local flora and fauna, this supports the notion that Likweli is a cryptic species, the researchers said.

Diogenesian•40m ago
Maybe you skipped over this in the beginning:

  The species, Colobus congoensis, is a rare and cryptic monkey largely unknown even among people living within its range. But those who are familiar with the small, black monkeys — an arboreal creature marked by distinctive orange-cream patches around their mouths and noses — call them “Likweli,” which the researchers recommend remain the species’ common name.
Otherwise I am a little confused what you're asking about.

Edit: also see the point that there is a very similar Colobus monkey more widely known by locals, but this is a distinct species known only to a few, and until 2018 was previously unknown even to local naturalists/explorers.

culi•29m ago
Yeah the second paragraph explicitly says the name "likweli" is the local name for it.

A lot of people seem confused about what "new species of [insert terrestrial animal]" means in 2026. Maybe it's a science communication failure. It'd be more correct and less confusing if we use "scientifically described" instead of "discovered". Even 100 years ago, almost every newly described species was already known and often named by local indigenous groups.

I'm reminded of how astounded modern botanists are at the "folk taxonomy" of Cahuilla people for oak species. They have a word for every modern species. An astounding feat given how notoriously difficult Quercus species are to differentiate given their profuse tendency to hybridize